Credit Default Swaps – Impose A Tax On Bogus Insurance
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]
Credit Default Swaps – Impose A Tax On Bogus Insurance
By Ron Cohen, CPA, MST
Partner
Greenstein, Rogoff, Olsen & Co., LLP
Proposal to amend the U.S. Internal Revenue Code: Any Seller, Buyer or Insured Party who enters into a Credit Default Swap (“CDS”) contract insuring U.S. source risks will be subject to an excise tax of 10% of the face amount of such CDS. Exception: If the CDS parties provide evidence the Seller of the CDS maintains directly related and segregated liquid assets as insurance reserves equal to 30% of the face value of the CDS, no excise tax will apply.
Well, that should do it. A complete end to high-tech gambling with CDSs.
Congress can debate what the percentages should be, but you get the general idea.
Background:
In my opinion, there are good and bad Credit Default Swaps.
A GOOD CDS helps spread reasonable risk, provides credit to worthy borrowers and assists economic growth.
However, a BAD CDS is an exercise in financial terrorism. Unworthy borrowers get credit they do not deserve followed by a cascade of bubble and bust events. These consequences include an exponential growth in the national debt…so large, that many argue (not this author, but some I respect) federal debt defaults are sure to come resulting in a dissolution of the U.S. central government…resulting in the dissolution of the Republic, as states and cities desperately re-group to avoid chaos.
All from bad CDS — an insurance product that barely existed 10 years ago.
So what is the difference between a GOOD and BAD CDS? Let’s go back to basic principles:
Basic Principal of Insurance: Insurance spreads risk from the “few” to the “many.” Everyone benefits. In order to successfully spread risk, the insurance must be able to pay claims for actual losses. The ability of a company to pay claims is dependent on highly-liquid asset reserves the insurance company holds (obtained by charging premiums over time). If the reserves are inadequate to pay claims, the insurance is bogus. The Seller of the insurance is simply gambling the claims will never arrive.
Confirmation of this basic principal was proven by three letters: A.I.G. They lost the gamble.
WHY NOT TURN TO REGULATORS versus the Tax Law?
Fair question. Let’s look at the Regulators and their history of ineptness.
Federal Reserve: Alan Greenspan was, until the bust, a cheerleader for BAD CDSs as a form of self-insurance and self-regulation for the banking system. Yikes!
Securities & Exchange Commission: Good at editing financial statements. Otherwise, they missed Enron, Worldcom and Madoff. Let’s not even discuss the Sarbanes-Oxley. Note that Madoff received various “clean opinions” under Sarbanes-Oxley audits.
Bank Regulators: Good at taking action after disaster has struck.
CPA, GAAP Financial Auditors: We don’t detect fraud. We can’t tell a client how to run their business. We can only complain and comment and/or quit. BAD CDS transactions are completely legal.
The Internal Revenue Service: Looking to this organization is useful. But not as a direct regulator, but as a beneficiary of the “self-assessment” tax system in the U.S.
Economic parties truly focus and obsess over tax liabilities and exposure to I.R.S. penalties and interest. Corporate behavior does change and adapt to tax laws.
Tax returns are internally and externally reviewed by various auditors and management. They verify the returns are correctly filed and the accounting impact of current and future taxes are appropriately recorded on the books.
Board of Director’s meetings include large amounts of time on tax compliance and planning. Directors and Officers understand the personal liability they may have for errors in tax reporting. Lastly, everyone understands the cash impact of sending money to the I.R.S. and other tax authorities. Taxes are very REAL.
That’s why I propose we cut-through the confusion and efforts of the inept, under-trained, under-resourced do-gooders at most agencies, and use the tax system to change behavior to eliminate BAD CGS.
Impose an excise tax, and the BAD CGS will largely disappear out of a natural desire to avoid incremental taxes. An army of auditors can’t do that. A good excise tax is much more efficient and effective.
While I usually complain about added laws, regulations and taxes, BAD CDS are a new and modern form of evil. We’d all happily accept a bit more tax law if it could avoid the foreclosure wastelands we now find within Stockton, California and Cleveland, Ohio…and all the related human suffering.
So that’s it. Have we saved the Republic? The whole idea is about two pages. You folks have to take it from here.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]
Should the IRS File Your Taxes for You?
Imagine a world where you didn’t have to file your own taxes. Of course, you can use an experienced and professional tax and accounting firm like GROCO to do your taxes for you, but what if you didn’t even have to send your tax return information to an accountant? Could that ever really happen? In…
Unstable Stock Market Could Hurt State Tax Budgets
While many feel the wealthy should be paying more in taxes, the efforts to enforce this strategy does have some consequences for state budgets. Many of the country’s wealthiest individuals hold the majority of their wealth in stocks. That means when the stock market goes down, so do the tax payments of the wealthy. In…
Florida Looking to Lure More Wealthy Taxpayers
The reports regarding many of the nation’s wealthy packing up and moving to different states in order to avoid the high taxes where they currently reside continue to mount. According to one such report, David Tepper, the president of Appaloosa Management L.P., who is the wealthiest resident of New Jersey, is in fact no longer…
How Long Does it Really Take to Prepare Business Taxes?
How Long Does it Really Take to Prepare Business Taxes? For most people, just hearing the words business taxes is enough to cause uneasy feelings, but for business owners the thought of doing their own business taxes can be a nightmare. Filing individual tax returns can be hard enough but the process gets even more…